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Be careful, NCAA, you won't get what you wished for Sports News
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Be careful, NCAA, you won't get what you wished for

 

The NCAA wanted O.J. Mayo to go to college, so off to college he went.

How did that work out for everyone?

O.J. Mayo watches in the rear-view mirror at the controversy his stint at USC leaves. (US Presswire)  
O.J. Mayo watches in the rear-view mirror at the controversy his stint at USC leaves. (US Presswire)  
Shortly after his one-and-done season at Southern California, Mayo has been accused -- on the record, with hard documentation -- of receiving thousands of dollars in cash, electronics, clothes and other goodies from a convicted agent runner allegedly working for the high-powered sports agency that now represents Mayo. If it's true, it's the kind of thing that should unleash hell on everyone involved.

The agency, BDA Sports, would have exposed itself to criminal charges. In California it's against the law for agents -- or their "runners" -- to give cash or gifts to a college athlete.

Mayo's records at USC would be expunged. His team's NCAA tournament berth would be vacated. College fans would lump his name with scumbags like Chris Webber, Marcus Camby and Jelani Gardner, who torpedoed Michigan, UMass and California.

Southern California would have to explain to the NCAA how, in the wake of the Reggie Bush football nightmare, the school shouldn't be found guilty of "lack of institutional control" for allowing its basketball program to be caught up in another Rodney Guillory scandal. (In 2000 the NCAA suspended USC basketball player Jeff Trepagnier for multiple games because of illicit gifts from Guillory.) USC would say it had no idea Rodney Guillory might still be a bad guy.

The NCAA would try not to laugh.

Actually, the NCAA might not be cynical enough to get the joke.

Because there's another O.J. Mayo out there, a whole flock of them actually, and the NCAA doesn't want less of these guys. The NCAA wants more.

NCAA president Myles Brand, who really does mean well, wants the NBA to lengthen its current rule that forces high school seniors to spend one year in college before they can apply for the NBA Draft. Brand wants the NBA to make it two years. He sees it as an extra year in the classroom for O.J. Mayo.

I see it as an extra year on the take for O.J. Mayo. And lots of players like him.

Let's be clear about this: O.J. Mayo, Rodney Guillory and BDA Sports are not the exception. They're not rogue players on an otherwise clean landscape. They're absolutely typical. If the NCAA asks me, and I mean this sincerely, I will give its investigators more examples of big-time players said to be tied to specific agents, and in some cases I'll give them the college coach said to have facilitated the introduction. The NCAA can investigate or not. It's up to the NCAA. But this stuff is real. Cheating is pervasive.

Here's where you, reading this story, want proof. If you have "more examples of big-time players tied to specific agents," prove it. Write that story, Doyel. We're waiting.

CONTINUED: 1 · 2 · Next »
 
Talk Back
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 11, 2006

May 13, 2008 11:42 am
I really like this article and it's a fascinating subject because it draws on so much of what lies underneath the surface of America. But enough hyperbole! The only umbrage I take with what you're writing here, Doyel, is your calling Webber, Camby, etc. "scumbags". Here are guys that are making their schools money. Pure and simple. Yeah, some of their backers got busted and it en ...(more)
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 27, 2006

May 13, 2008 11:49 am
The NCAA wants the best players in the highest profile schools for one reason - money.  They want to make money off these players for the year they have to be in school with the guise of it being better for the athlete to have one year of school.  What a crock.  If the NCAA thinks that a kid that knows they are only going to be in school for one year gives a rats ass about school or ...(more)
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 5, 2007

May 13, 2008 5:39 pm
Nice one D. Now are you gonna stay on point and try to get something done about it?
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 27, 2007

May 13, 2008 1:43 pm

I'm not necessarily a fan of college baseball, but they have a rule that works.  The kid either goes pro or goes to school.  If he goes to school, he can't go pro until he's a junior or hits age 21.  This won't be the ultimate fix, but it would get rid of the "one and dones". 

The only way to discourage the agents is to hit them where it cou ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Jan 10, 2008

May 13, 2008 7:13 pm
Love the "shrewdly clueless" description of Tim Floyd.  "Weasel" doesn't cut it anymore for me.  Thanks Gregg.
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 4, 2007

May 13, 2008 11:28 am
Come on Gregg, name names......remember the Seinfeld episode?  "She named names....."  You won't get blacklisted.  Well, maybe sued, but isn't that the badge of honor for all journalists??  OK, use aliases, but easy to figure out ( I am working, have to conserve brainpower for other things), like "Darrin Lilly" or something......
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 27, 2006

May 13, 2008 9:48 pm
I admit, when this rule first came into effect I was for it. I don't know what I was thinking. IT makes no sense to me to force kids to go to college for one year. What is the point? The baseball system is better than this. But the old NBA system was even better. Let them leave any time they want after H.S. They're adults after all.

Why should they be forced to go to
...(more)
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 4, 2007

May 13, 2008 11:20 am

Very good column Gregg, and although I would love to know some of the names you're alluded to, something tells me that, with about ten minutes thinking, I could come up with probably 75% of the ones you're talking about.  Some of these guys you just KNOW are doing it, some of these schools you just KNOW are doing it....

Brand might have had the best of intentions, but all h ...(more)

 
 
 
 
Gregg Doyel
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